What A Day - A Mass Shooting On An NYC Subway Train
Episode Date: April 13, 2022A mass shooting took place on a New York City subway train, Tuesday morning. According to New York’s Fire Department, 10 people were shot and, miraculously, no one died. We recap what we know and wh...at we don’t know about the shooting.And in headlines: Ukrainian fighters in Mariupol accused Russia of using chemical weapons, Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed a bill that outlaws performing an abortion in the state, and New York Lieutenant Governor Brian Benjamin resigned.Show Notes:Center for Family Life – https://centerforfamilylife.orgWorker's Justice Project – http://workersjustice.orgSouth BK Mutual Aid – https://southbkmutualaid.comFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Wednesday, April 13th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Priyanka Arabindi, and this is What A Day. Let's get right into the news.
On today's show, inflation hit another 40-year high,
plus Oklahoma's governor signs into law a near-total ban on abortion.
But first, what we know and what we still don't know about the mass shooting that took place on a New York City subway train yesterday.
The worst shooting in the subway's entire history.
We're recording this at 9.30 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday night, so you may very well learn more today.
You may already know more, but we wanted to give you the full background on how yesterday unfolded so you have the necessary context.
Gideon, you are there in Brooklyn now. You've been keeping track of everything.
First off, what do we know about this shooter right now?
The main thing that we learned last night,
police said that he was still on the loose.
That's some 12 hours or so after the shooting.
But they also said they were looking for a, quote,
person of interest.
That came after they apparently found a key
to a U-Haul van at the
scene of the shooting. So that van, they claimed, was rented to a man named Frank James, who they
said rented it in Philadelphia. However, there is still no one in custody at this particular moment,
and his connection to the shooting has not been made totally clear at this time. Police also said
that they had recovered a handgun, magazines, two unused
smoke grenades, among other things at the scene. So a lot of information quickly. Yeah. Okay. Now
that we know this, can you rewind a little bit and tell us more about how all of this unfolded
yesterday morning? Yeah, I'll try. I'm still sort of wrapping my own head around it. So our listeners
may have seen pieces of this developing throughout the day, but this all really began a little before 8.30 a.m., part of the
busiest stretch of the morning commute. Yeah. This happened at the 36th Street subway station,
which is in Sunset Park in Brooklyn. Here is New York Police Commissioner Kishant Sewell kind of
walking through the basics. Just before 8.24 this morning, as a Manhattan-bound
N train waited to enter the 36th Street station, an individual on that train donned what appeared
to be a gas mask. He then took a canister out of his bag and opened it. The train at that time
began to fill with smoke. He then opened fire, striking multiple people on the subway and in the platform.
That's terrifying.
Yeah, I mean, before I heard that, we didn't really know much else.
You know, like we were seeing that something was happening.
This was relatively close to me.
So I knew people that were going into work.
I was trying to figure out on what trains even had the kind of stupid exchange of like,
is your train delayed as all of this is happening?
I know a lot of kids that live in the area that go to the school where my girlfriend works. This
feels like a lot more kind of in my vicinity than, say, a Times Square or something like that.
Right.
Felt close, for sure. Pretty chaotic and horrifying, particularly when we were just
starting to see those first videos and images that were going around of, you know, blood and smoke and people on the ground. Just really hard to process when you look at it. Yeah. What
do we know about the victims of this event? According to the first deputy commissioner for
New York's fire department, 10 people were shot. Miraculously, no one has died. That's kind of
the thing I'm holding on to if there is anything to hold on to from the day. The AP reported that
five of those people are in critical condition but are expected to survive as well. In total, at least 29 were
treated at area hospitals for gunshot wounds, some smoke inhalation from actually being on that train,
or the rush to get out of the station to leave that situation. Yeah, and let's talk about the
people who were around as this situation was unfolding.
What did they have to say about what they experienced?
Yeah, I mean, their accounts were just harrowing,
totally, totally harrowing.
So here's one example, Juliana Fonda,
a broadcast engineer for local public radio station WNYC.
She spoke to the outlet about her experience
actually being on the N train when she heard
gunshots from the neighboring subway car.
The reaction of the passengers was terrifying because they were trying to get into our car
away from something that was happening in the back of the train.
None of us in the front of the train knew what was going on, but people were pounding
and looking behind them, running and trying to get onto the train.
The door locked between cars and
the people behind us, there was a lot of loud pops and there was smoke in the other car and people
were trying to get in and they couldn't. They were pounding on the door to get into our car.
Once we got to 36th Street, they were herding us into our train. People didn't know what was
going on and there was smoke throughout the platform. I did see people laying on the ground on the platform at 36th Street. There are people
in the front of the car of the R train we were shuffled into that were laying on the ground that
had obviously been shot. They brought some of these people out and they are on the street at
4th and 25th. It was really horrific all around. Yeah. And it is such a part of your
daily routine if you live in New York. So just really terrifying that something like this
happened. Obviously, it's still really early. But what sort of responses have we started to hear
from, you know, leadership? Well, Mayor Eric Adams initially said they were going to double
the number of officers in the subway system through
last night, which led some people to say that could inevitably just result in more enforcement
against unhoused people and ticketing turnstile jumpers, things of that nature. Right. Especially
because there are questions about what law enforcement was and was not doing as this
individual was leaving the station, I guess. There were even some people asking Adams about
possible metal detectors in the trains, which many others pointed out, as you have alluded to,
being wildly impractical because of the huge numbers of people who use the subway every day.
Numerically, you were talking about a system that before the pandemic had more daily riders than all
commercial U.S. airline flights.
It's a lot of people coming and going. That is wild. That is just a huge number of people.
It's really crazy. And it got to a point that a spokesperson had to issue a clarification
saying that Adams was interested in, quote, innovative technology and not, quote,
airport style metal detectors. Sure, I guess we'll find out more.
That feels like such a dig at metal detectors.
But great, yes.
I hope that we have more information as we move forward.
But one other thing,
as officials were trying to identify a possible suspect,
one of the things that kept coming up a little incredulously
is how security cameras did not appear to capture the person.
Eric Adams later said that there was, quote,
some sort of malfunction with the camera
system at the station. Luckily, I suppose authorities say they were able to get an image
of the suspect from an eyewitness's cell phone video. So that's a little bit of where things
stand. We're definitely going to find out more about this attack in the days to come.
We'll include some links to community organizations in wonderful Sunset Park
as well in our show notes. But that
is the latest for now. Let's get to some headlines.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said that peace talks are at a, quote,
dead end and that the offensive against Ukraine will continue.
Speaking at a news conference yesterday, he also claimed that the U.S. and U.K.
were conspiring to help Ukraine fake claims of Russian war crimes.
Meanwhile, at an event in Iowa, while speaking about rising fuel costs,
President Biden said for the first time that Putin is committing genocide.
None of it should hinge on whether a dictator declares war and commits genocide half a world away.
On the ground in Ukraine itself, fighters in the southern port city of Mariupol accused Russia of
using chemical weapons on Monday. In an unverified social media post, they said Russia deployed a
drone that spread, quote, a poisonous substance of unknown origin and that people started to suffer respiratory and
neurological problems. It is a war crime to use chemical weapons, according to the Geneva Protocol.
However, Ukraine and Western powers are trying to confirm the claims made in the post.
Here is Pentagon spokesperson John Kirby yesterday.
We're obviously taking it seriously and we're monitoring it.
We're trying to do the best we can to figure out what if anything happened,
but we're not in a position to confirm it right now.
Yeah, but it would be a very serious situation if the claims are true,
with one Australian official saying it would be a, quote, wholesale breach of international law.
Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt signed a bill yesterday that made
performing an abortion in the state of Oklahoma illegal. The bill makes performing an abortion
a felony and anyone convicted could face up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $100,000.
The only exception is if the life of the pregnant person is in danger. There are no exceptions for
rape or for incest. The bill is set to go into effect this summer unless it is blocked by the courts.
It is certain to face legal challenges.
And if it seems like you've been hearing a bunch of headlines like this recently, you are not wrong.
Republican-led states across the country are rushing to restrict abortion access in the run-up to the Supreme Court's ruling on the fate of Roe v. Wade this summer when they decide on Mississippi's 15-week abortion ban.
But this is one of the country's most extreme anti-abortion bills. Aside from infringing on
the rights of the people of Oklahoma, this bill also impacts people from Texas, many of whom have
been traveling to Oklahoma for abortion care since their state's six-week abortion ban went into
effect last September. Without abortion access in Oklahoma and in Texas,
people in these states seeking abortion care may have to travel as far as Arkansas,
Kansas, or New Mexico, where appointments are already booked out several weeks in advance.
Okay. The American dollar once again looked in the mirror and felt ashamed of the bill that it
had become yesterday when new data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed inflation at a 40-year high. For the 12 months ending in March, the
consumer price index rose 8.5%, mostly driven by increased gasoline and food prices. Gas prices
alone surged by 48% over this period. Some of the price increases stem from Russia's war in Ukraine,
but the overarching cause is that the economy picks back up faster than anyone expected after slowing down in spring 2020.
Did anything happen around then?
And businesses have been struggling ever since to meet the demand.
To tackle inflation, the federal bank has been trying to carefully slow the economy by raising interest rates, which were brought way down when the economy crashed following the onset of the pandemic. But high inflation does not appear to be going anywhere soon, with economists
expecting that it will persist well into next year. Yeah, also yesterday, President Biden announced
plans to attack inflation by attacking this big blue marble that we call Earth. His Environmental
Protection Agency will issue a waiver allowing the sale of high ethanol content gas or E15 to
be sold in the summer. That means overriding a seasonal ban on these fuels, which is meant to
cut down on smog since E15 is considered to be dirtier than traditional gas. E15 is about 10
cents cheaper per gallon. So Biden's framing this as a win for consumers at the pump. But E15 isn't
all that popular either, with only 23300 gas stations selling it in the US.
So the impact of this move could be limited.
2,300 seems small.
Yeah, this also objectively saves you
like a dollar or so total on like a gas fill up
if you're driving like a normal size car.
Like, love ya, but like there's gotta be a better plan here.
This doesn't seem like it's worth it.
No offense.
Yeah, not for Smog City.
Undergoing what's becoming a rite of passage for someone whose title includes the words
New York Governor, New York Lieutenant Governor Brian Benjamin resigned yesterday.
His decision to step down came after federal authorities arrested him for allegedly committing
bribery and fraud to enrich his political career.
Authorities say that when Benjamin was a state senator, he directed $50,000 to a Harlem real estate developer's charity. And in exchange, the developer funneled illegal donations into his
2020 U.S. Senate and 2021 NYC comptroller campaigns. Benjamin is also accused of falsifying
records specifically on his background check to be the lieutenant governor.
Doesn't seem like a place to really be lying, but nope.
According to court documents, he pleaded not guilty and is out on a $250,000 bond.
Benjamin was second in command to Governor Kathy Hochul,
and just a few days ago was her running mate for reelection.
But after yesterday's news, Hochul released a statement saying,
quote, I have accepted Brian Benjamin's resignation
effective immediately.
I believe this went on to include the words,
I do not know her.
I wish.
Yeah.
He didn't have the job for long.
Hochul appointed Benjamin to replace her last summer
after she took over for former governor Andrew Cuomo.
For now, Benjamin's duties will be taken on
by New York Senate leader Andrea Stewart Cousins,
praying she does not have any giant skeletons in her closet.
Listen, it seems like anybody that goes
in a 20-mile vicinity of Albany
is going to have something of this nature blow up.
It's frequent. It's quite frequent.
Listen, something's deeply wrong with you
if you even want that job, so it makes sense.
That's true. It's not attracting the best and brightest. And those are the headlines. We'll
be back after some ads with financial insights related to Elon Musk's new Texas-sized stake
in Twitter. It's Wednesday, Wild Squad, and today we're doing a new segment called
WAD Money. Yes, it is pronounced that way for rhyming with mad money purposes.
In this segment, we use our extensive financial expertise as two millennials who lost our
passwords and got locked out of the Peter Pan app to advise you on all investments. Listen up,
everybody. So today we are returning to the story of the shit poster who bought the keys to the
toilet. Twitter's largest stakeholder and
Tesla founder, Elon Musk. Of course. Over the past week, we've seen a lot of updates on Musk's
relationship to Twitter. It began when the world found out he bought over 9% of the company last
Monday. Can you believe it has been like this short amount of time? No, I cannot. Yeah, me
either. Then Twitter CEO Parag Agarwal announced Musk would be added to the board of directors.
Days later this past Sunday, Agarwal tweeted that Musk had declined to join.
Twitter insiders had feared what Musk would do with a board seat given his inflammatory
views about free speech and censorship, but they soon discovered that an unseated Musk
could be even more powerful and, dare I say, dangerous.
As he wrote on Monday in a letter to the Securities
and Exchange Commission, Musk can now buy as much of Twitter as he wants, instead of being limited
to 14.9%. He can also freely express his views about the company on social media and isn't
required to act in Twitter's best interest. And he won't. Believe me, he will not. If Musk's
behavior over the weekend is any indication, he will take full advantage of his freedom.
For a man holding about $3 billion of Twitter,
he unleashed some truly chaotic posts,
including now-deleted tweets that questioned
whether Twitter's San Francisco headquarters
should be turned into a homeless shelter
since much of the staff is now remote,
and another tweet polling his fans
on whether to delete the W in Twitter.
The world's richest man is also the world's richest 11-year-old, it appears. Twitter stock price shot up 27% when Elon's big purchase
of Twitter stock was first announced, then climbed even higher when it seemed like he'd joined the
board. But it has slid a bit since then. It fell 5% yesterday. So Gideon, based on this big
description here and your extensive expertise, do you rate Twitter as a buy,
sell, hold, strong buy, or strong sell? I'd love to hear your justification here.
Well, I would say strong buy, and here's why. Oh, wow. Okay.
I think that nothing makes any sense. And we look at these situations logically as financial experts and say, chaos is not
the best, but it seems to have worked for all of the people involved here to some degree.
And I think that at this point, my financial expertise is overridden by the facts that
I have seen, which tell me to strong buy because the world is absolute chaos
and I guess leaning into the chaos works.
But same question for you.
You make a point.
Yeah, I think this is going to be a very interesting segment
for the listeners looking for advice
because I'm going to say the exact opposite.
I'm saying strong sell.
I'm saying, but this is also really specific.
I'm thinking if you already have this,
if you're in a position to strong sell,
because not everyone will,
you will have already made the money.
You already got the boom from him joining.
So why don't you just sell right now?
Get out.
You made some money.
Great.
You can wash your hands of this and act like it never happened.
You could do that or go for the ride, I guess. Yeah, you could risk feeling very silly in the future when somehow this is worth even more because, I don't know, they get some other maniac to be involved in this process and
makes the stock price rise even more. I don't know. That was WAD Money. For legal purposes,
we do have to say that all of our stock trading advice is bad. Hopefully you got some entertainment
though. Yeah, that's what we're shooting for. We'll be waiting for our CNBC contracts coming through any day now.
Yeah, please.
Thank you.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review.
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Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Priyanka Arabindi. I'm Gideon Resnick. And control yourself, Mr. Must. That'll make him
lean into it even more. It's a reverse psychology thing. He'll never stop. He will never stop.
Can't tell you what's going to happen to your stock, but yeah. I feel confident yeah bad what a day is a production of crooked media it's recorded and mixed by bill lance
jazzy marine and raven yamamoto are our associate. Our head writer is John Milstein and our executive producers are Leo Duran
and me, Gideon Resnick.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.